This site is about the Abraham COVERT Farm Cemetery in Ovid, Seneca County, NY. Abraham COVERT was one of the first settlers to this area after the American Revolution. There are nearly 90 people buried in the somewhat remote cemetery including six Revolutionary War Veterans and a Veteran of the War of 1812. This cemetery is very important to members of the COVERT family and to those allied with it. The site contains a census of those believed buried here and photos as well as a link to other sites with photos of many of the grave stones. A few of the surnames included: SIMPSON, VANDOREN, VANHORN, WYCKOFF, EASTMAN, VANZANT, DUNN, BENNETT, SWARTOUT, SWARTHOUT, BLUE, TENEYCK, STOKUM, VOORHEES, FOUNTAIN, SWICK, GRAY, LITTLE, COSHUM, COLE, HARRIS, SEBRING, LECONTE, MORRIS, HOUGHTON and SPADER. Credit should be given to Micah Polk who recently cleaned up the cemetery for his Eagle Scout Project.

The ABMC is responsible for commemorating the services of the American Armed Forces through the establishment of suitable memorial shrines; operating & maintaining permanent American military burial grounds in foreign countries. Web site includes detailed descriptions of overseas cemeteries & searchable databases of war dead.

Online searchable database of the 176,399 names of those American service personnel buried at ABMC cemeteries, those Missing in Action and those buried or lost at sea. Note that there were 405,399 US casualties in World War II.

Original source: Burial Registers for Military Posts, Camps, and Stations, 1768-1921; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M2014, 1 roll); Records of the Office of the Quartermaster General, Record Group 92; National Archives, Washington, D.C.

3,258,924 Records. Source: National Cemetery Administration, Veterans Affairs. Use Archives.com with a FREE 7-day membership and search over 2.1 billion records. Pay-for-use after the seven day free trial.

Arlington, Virginia, USA. Arlington National Cemetery performs 27 to 30 funeral services each day. The grounds of Arlington National Cemetery honor those who have served our nation by providing a sense of beauty and peace for our guests. The rolling green hills are dotted with trees that are hundreds of years in age and complement the gardens found throughout the 624 acres of the cemetery. This impressive landscape serves as a tribute to the service and sacrifice of every individual laid to rest within the hallowed grounds of Arlington National Cemetery.

Arlington National Cemetery has developed ANC Explorer, an application that is available across common web browsers and on mobile smart phones. This app enables veterans, family members and the public to explore Arlington's rich history. This first version of ANC Explorer allows users to locate gravesites events,or other points of interest; generate front and back photos of a headstone or monument; and receive directions to those locations.

The purpose of this website is to present pictures of the graves and information about the soldiers who served during the Civil War. Also, to make them accessible to interested persons. The site is being updated regularly. Pictures, as of now, have all been taken in the US, but we will include those buried in other countries, as they become available.

This site is devoted to locating the names and locations of burials of Civil War veterans buried in Arkansas, both union and confederate. List over 20,000 names in four books. Each entry contains military and personal data when known.The information contained in the four books do not overlap unless additional information was obtained on a soldier. Civil War soldiers from all Union and Confederate states are recorded.

There are literally tens of thousands of United States Veterans remains left unclaimed throughout the Nation. Waiting sometimes decades to be identified as Veterans and given a Proper Military burial. Many times, the only people in attendance at this service are the funeral directors and the Honors Team. That is the last they are heard of. Their Legacy gone. That is changing. The Families For Forgotten heroes program was born on 7 April 2011. Our mission is to maintain a searchable online Database of Unclaimed Veterans, and through the tireless efforts of our Genealogy Team, Locate Next of Kin for these Unclaimed Veterans.